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각성과 화해 -1907년 대각성의 회고와 전망, 이와 관련된 다섯 가지 성경적 주제들-
Anthony C. Thiselton 한국신학정보연구원 2007 Canon&Culture Vol.1 No.2
As we celebrate the centenary of the Great Awakening of 1907, we long for God to do great things today. Yet we do not seek to repeat a past experience. We seek to learn from the pattern of events that led up to this event in order to become ready before God for whatever gift or experience that God is pleased to grant to us today. (1) A sustained study of scripture led up to the events of 1907. Isaiah 55:10-11, the First Epistle of John, Psalm 51, and other passages played a key part. Scripture gave not simply information, but also formation and transformation. (2) A brokenhearted grief befell the Church and nation at that time. Just as Israel in the Bible lay at the mercy of Egypt, Syria, and Assyria, Korea lay at the mercy of invasions from China, Russia, and Japan. They stripped her of her dignity, and the church cried out to God. In utter grief Christians looked to God alone. (3) The Holy Spirit fell upon the praying church with new and sanctifying power. He provoked a deeper sense of sin and deeper longing for holiness. The Spirit led believers to abandon all self-sufficiency and to seek to become more like Christ. This involved deeper prayer. The Holy Spirit interceded with God the Father through Jesus Christ, within believers (Romans 8:26). In this “inter-Trinitarian conversation” “Each was face-to-face with God” (4) Reconciliation transformed relations between Christians. The Spirit expelled envy, ambition, hostility, and self-assertion. As “limbs” of Christ’s body Christians stand in solidarity before God. All are his holy temple, so to sin against a believer becomes sacrilege. Christ identifies himself with his people (Acts 9:4-5). (5) The Awakening was akin to resurrection. Dry bones (Ezekiel 37) came together as a single, living, body. In resurrection, believers look in trust to God alone (2 Corinthians 1:9). The resources of God make everything possible. As we celebrate the centenary of the Great Awakening of 1907, we long for God to do great things today. Yet we do not seek to repeat a past experience. We seek to learn from the pattern of events that led up to this event in order to become ready before God for whatever gift or experience that God is pleased to grant to us today. (1) A sustained study of scripture led up to the events of 1907. Isaiah 55:10-11, the First Epistle of John, Psalm 51, and other passages played a key part. Scripture gave not simply information, but also formation and transformation. (2) A brokenhearted grief befell the Church and nation at that time. Just as Israel in the Bible lay at the mercy of Egypt, Syria, and Assyria, Korea lay at the mercy of invasions from China, Russia, and Japan. They stripped her of her dignity, and the church cried out to God. In utter grief Christians looked to God alone. (3) The Holy Spirit fell upon the praying church with new and sanctifying power. He provoked a deeper sense of sin and deeper longing for holiness. The Spirit led believers to abandon all self-sufficiency and to seek to become more like Christ. This involved deeper prayer. The Holy Spirit interceded with God the Father through Jesus Christ, within believers (Romans 8:26). In this “inter-Trinitarian conversation” “Each was face-to-face with God” (4) Reconciliation transformed relations between Christians. The Spirit expelled envy, ambition, hostility, and self-assertion. As “limbs” of Christ’s body Christians stand in solidarity before God. All are his holy temple, so to sin against a believer becomes sacrilege. Christ identifies himself with his people (Acts 9:4-5). (5) The Awakening was akin to resurrection. Dry bones (Ezekiel 37) came together as a single, living, body. In resurrection, believers look in trust to God alone (2 Corinthians 1:9). The resources of God make everything possible.